Title of article :
Possible effects of climate change on estuarine nutrient fluxes: a case study in the highly nutrified Schelde estuary (Belgium, The Netherlands)
Author/Authors :
Eric Struyf، نويسنده , , Stefan Van Damme، نويسنده , , Patrick Meire، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Global change models predict effects of climate change on hydrological regimes at the continental scale in Europe. The aim of
this study was to gain a better understanding of the possible effect of changing external forcing conditions on the functioning of
estuarine ecosystems. In densely populated areas, anthropogenic nutrient enrichment and consequent alteration of nutrient
biogeochemical cycles have already had a big impact on these ecosystems. The average yearly discharge of the upper Schelde estuary
increased nearly threefold over the period 1996e2000, from 28 m3 s 1 in 1996 to 73 m3 s 1 in 2000. The continuously rising
discharge conditions over the five-year period were used as a reference situation for possible future effects of climate on ecological
functioning through increase of discharge. At high discharges, nutrient (NH4
C, NO3
, dissolved silica and PO4
3 ) concentrations in
the tidal fresh- and brackish water showed a decrease of up to 50% while total discharged nutrient loadings increased up to 100%.
Opposite effects of increasing discharge on NH4
C, NO3
and dissolved silica concentrations in summer and winter, resulted in the
flattening out of seasonal cycles for these nutrients. Under high discharge conditions, silica uptake by diatom communities was
lowered. Dissolved silica loadings to the coastal area increased concurrently with total silica loadings upstream. Salt intrusion to the
marine parts of the estuary decreased. This resulted in a downstream shift of the salinity gradient, with lower salinity observed near
the mouth. As a result, TDIN, NO3
and dissolved silica concentrations doubled at the mouth of the estuary.
Keywords :
silica , hydrology , non-point pollution , estuary , Climate-change , nitrogen
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science